"So from an angry lawman's mouth, the Outlaw Motorcyclists were born."
-Chuck Zito, Former Leader of the Hell's Angels
Pretty much from when I was about eight years old, I always looked up to the rebels known as the Hell's Angels. Zito was more than a man, he was a mantra. When I used to fight in grade school, it comforted me to find out Zito was no stranger to fistacuffs himself. He taught me to never back down:
"I've been fighting my whole life" -Zito
"If the challenge to fight was there, I always took it." Zito
Also, just like myself, toiling every summer away in the dry fields of 'Tana, many of them lived hard too:
"Let me tell you something: I have members in my charter who, after paying their rent and house bills and taking care of their families, don't even have enough money to pay the fifteen dollars a week dues." -Zito
So, as I grew, I modeled my own mentality after the honorable hedonists. When questioned about my own business by my high school teachers, i offered them a quote from the fountain of truth himself:
"Now as far as organizations selling drugs, no. Individuals selling drugs is something else." -Zito
By the time I graduated, almost every piece of the American Moses' life had become my own. Even my lesser known past histories coincided with the life of Zito the Great:
"I was a stuntman for over fifteen years." -Zito
Thus, coming to Korea, I knew I could not leave my past behind. I've been riding Ms. Magdaelim--Maggie for short--for about a month now, and she's the smoothest bike I've ever owned.
Here are a couple shots of Maggie in all her glory.
1 comment:
You're funny. And this was fun to read. Join Ted and I on our motorbike tour of SE Asia this December?
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